| Literature DB >> 31597652 |
Christopher Hurst1,2, Lorelle Dismore1,2, Antoneta Granic1,3,2, Karen Davies1,3,2, Emma Stevenson4,5, Avan A Sayer1,3,2, Terry Aspray6,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Sarcopenia is a progressive muscle disorder characterised by decline in skeletal muscle mass, strength and function leading to adverse health outcomes, including falls, frailty, poor quality of life and death. It occurs more commonly in older people and can be accelerated by poor diet and low physical activity. Intervention studies incorporating higher dietary protein intakes or protein supplementation combined with resistance exercise (RE) have been shown to limit muscle function decline. However, less is known about the role of whole foods in reducing the risk of sarcopenia. Milk is a source of high-quality nutrients, which may be beneficial for skeletal muscle. This pilot study examines the feasibility and acceptability of milk consumption with RE to improve muscle function in community-dwelling older adults at risk of sarcopenia. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: 30 older adults aged ≥65 years will be randomly allocated to three groups: 'whole milk+RE', 'skimmed milk+RE' or 'control drink+RE'. Assessments will take place in participants' homes, including screening (milk allergies, grip strength, walking speed), baseline and postintervention health and function. All participants will undertake a structured RE intervention twice a week for 6 weeks at a local gym, followed by the consumption of 500 mL of whole or skimmed milk (each ~20 g of protein) or an isocaloric control drink and another 500 mL at home. Participants' views about the study will be assessed using standardised open-ended questions. The primary outcomes include feasibility and acceptability of the intervention with recruitment, retention and intervention response rates. Analyses will include descriptive statistics, exploration of qualitative themes and intervention fidelity. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Outputs include pilot data to support funding applications; public involvement events; presentation at conferences and peer-reviewed publication. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN13398279; Pre-results. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: older adults; physical function; pilot study; resistance exercise; sarcopenia; whole milk
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31597652 PMCID: PMC6797244 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-031048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for the MIlkMAN: pilot
| Criteria | Patient database searches | Screening interview |
| Inclusion | ||
| Aged 65 years and over | ||
| Live in the community | ||
| Exclusion | ||
| Diabetes mellitus type 1 or type 2 | Lacks capacity to consent to participate | |
| Chronic kidney disease stage 4 or 5 (estimated glomerular filtration rate<30 mL/min/1.73 m2) | Lactose intolerance | |
| Liver function impairment (AST>2.5 times upper limit of normal range within the last 6 months) | Dislikes milk or cranberry juice (control drink) | |
| Participated in a structured RE training and gym programme in the last month | ||
| Chronic lung disease requiring maintenance steroid therapy (eg, COPD, severe asthma) | Dislikes gym exercise with equipment | |
| End-stage terminal illness | Unintentional weight loss ≥5 kg in the last 3 months | |
| Cardiac pacemaker or severe heart failure or other significant heart disease | Unable to understand instructions for muscle strength and function assessments in English or unwilling to participate in protocol when explained | |
| Uncontrolled hypertension (>160/100 mm Hg) and uncontrolled hypotension (<100 mm Hg systolic) within last 6 months | An individual who the research team (exercise physiologist) evaluates as not suitable for the intervention because of safety reasons | |
| Hip or knee replacement | ||
| Impaired mobility (unable to walk without an aid including wheelchair) | ||
| Current prescription of warfarin (potential interference with control drink) | ||
| BMI≥30 kg/m2 | ||
| An individual who the GP feels it is inappropriate for the research team to approach for safety reasons: any medical and physical conditions that preclude safe participation in a RE programme (long-term conditions likely to lead impaired function over 6 months) | ||
AST, aspartate aminotransferase; BMI, body mass index; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; GP, general practitioner.
Study outcome measures
| Measure | Screening | Baseline | Postintervention |
| Primary | |||
| Feasibility and acceptability of intervention in a local gym setting | × | ||
| Applicability | × | ||
| Dosage and duration of intervention | × | ||
| Compliance | × | × | |
| Attrition | × | × | |
| Adverse health effects | × | ||
| Response rates to questionnaires, assessments and intervention | × | × | × |
| Secondary | |||
| Short physical performance battery | × | × | |
| Muscle mass | × | × | |
| Grip strengh | × | × | × |
| SF-12 Health Survey | × | × | |
| Barthel ndex | × | × |
SF-12, Short Form 12-item Health Survey.
Figure 1Study flow chart. The recruitment (assessment of eligibility) up to allocation (randomisation into three groups) will be finalised within 3 months, followed by baseline assessments for health and functioning in participants’ homes, and a 6-week intervention in a local gym. A postintervention assessment will be conducted over 3 weeks in participants’ homes. Data will be analysed following data entry, cleaning and quality assurance over 2–3 months.
Domains and assessments at baseline
| Domain and assessment | Time to administer (min) |
| Sociodemographic profile | Total: 6 |
| Age | |
| Sex | |
| Marital status | |
| Education | |
| Social class (NS-SEC) | |
| Deprivation (Multiple Index of Deprivation) | |
| General health | Total: 54 |
| SF-12 Health Survey | 4 |
| Self-reported diseases diagnosed by a doctor | 2 |
| List of medication (prescribed and over-the-counter) | 2 |
| Mini Mental State Examination | 10 |
| Geriatric Depression Scale (15-item version) | 7 |
| Barthel Index (activities of daily living) | 3 |
| Blood pressure (systolic and diastolic)* | 5 |
| Intake24: 24 hours dietary recall | 20 |
| Appetite (a 4-item Simplified Nutritional Appetite Questionnaire) | 1 |
| Lifestyle | Total: 5 |
| Self-reported physical activity | 3 |
| Smoking status | 1 |
| Alcohol intake | 1 |
| Anthropometry | Total: 14 |
| Demi-span | 2 |
| Waist and hip circumference | 3 |
| Calf circumference | 2 |
| Muscle mass (body composition by BIA) | 7 |
| Physical functioning | Total: 24 |
| Short Physical Performance Battery | 10 |
| Balance (a side-by-side tandem; semi-tandem; tandem) | 3 |
| 4 m gait speed | 3 |
| 5-chair stands | 4 |
| Maximum grip strength (measured three times in each arm) | 4 |
NS-SEC, The National Statistics Socio-economic classification (Office for National Statistics, UK).
*Assessments done at the intervention site (gym) before and after each RE session (blood pressure), and before the first RE session (diet, appetite, body composition).
BIA, Bioelectric Impedance Analysis; RE, resistance exercise; SF-12, 12-item Short Form Health Survey.